Author:
Dr. Eva Ivits | European Environment Agency (EEA) | Denmark
Continental scale land degradation assessment supporting nature restoration targets under the EU Green Deal.
Eva Ivits (European Environment Agency), Jaume Fons Esteve, Mirko Gregor, Gundula Prokop, Manuel Loehnertz, Roger Milego, Emanuele Mancosu
Land is an essential natural resource, both for the survival and prosperity of people and for the maintenance of all terrestrial ecosystems. Current land use trends and land management focused on increasing production together with climate change create strong environmental pressures. Together they have become the key drivers for the decline of nature, that is pressured through land take, intensive forest management and agriculture, droughts, wildfires, etc. Land use change and the increasing impact of droughts, fires and floods leads to areas of less biodiversity value and of less carbon sink potential, including the loss of fertile soils. The limits on land resources are finite, while human demands on them are not. Increased demand, or pressure on land resources, result in declining crop production, degradation of land quality and quantity, and competition for land.
The EU Nature Restoration Plan, as part of the EU Biodiversity Strategy for 2030, highlights the urgent need for restoration of degraded ecosystems that are in a poor state, at the same time as reducing the pressures on habitats and species, and ensuring all use of ecosystems is sustainable. The Plan sets several priorities as bringing nature back to agricultural land, addressing land take and restoring soil ecosystems, increasing the quantity of forests and improving their health and resilience, or restoring freshwater ecosystems addressing riparian zones, among others. This work responds to the need to understand land processes better, that lead to land degradation, and corresponding worsening of ecosystem condition.
We use the concept of degraded land as “land in a state of persistent loss of biodiversity, ecosystem functions and services” according to the definition of IPBES. One of the key principles of the methodological concept is to use all available and relevant data, information and knowledge, both from Earth Observation or of statistical/administrative nature. Several land degradation processes and types are to be considered, e.g. land take, fragmentation, degraded floodplains, deforestation, drained wetlands and burnt areas. In that context, and over the last years, the EEA have processed and integrated a number of geospatial datasets in the EEA Integrated Data Platform (IDP), addressing land use change, land take, floodplains, fragmentation, droughts, and others. The platform uses all available data dimensions and data cubes in EEA´s IDP, in a series of interactive dashboards using technologies such as ArcGIS online (Operations Dashboard or Insights), Tableau, and others.
Unsustainable land management practices, which include land cover/use changes and over-exploitation, are combined with climate-induced impacts, such as wildfires or droughts and with soil degradation processes. The platform allows users to map, explore and plot land degradation processes pressuring specific regions (e.g. 10km grid and NUTS3 regions). Future work with concentrate on increasing the spatial resolution of the platforms towards Sentinels.